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ma: cgugms: M I /3 “$5 41?” 146119} it;/3%! /65;;/ W‘ /:// 3 Combined with THE CORRECT OR (1822) and HE N EWS (1909), Vol. 87, No.» 26 O Village Paper Sag Harbor, Long. Iaiand, N. Y., Thuriclny, April 1, I948 $3.00 a Year in Adivaned . I 3‘ ('5 ;«r— - r\? . . s ':f1-. ran Diploma Awarded ? To w. w. Weeks, chm { In District Atfy. Office Supervisors Increase Salaries in Several Gaunly Departments This car Bid Nat [lake 3 Turn 615037 Suffotk Voters Eligible to Take _ é Bounty Wide? In Establishment of Experimental %I.alIoraiary Fart in Spring Primary Having cmzpleted a three’-manths cmzrse in Law enforcement war}: at the FBI Natienal Academy in Wash- ington, D. C., Walter Wj. Weeks~, chief investigator in District Attor~ ney Lindsay R. Hcnry’s office, re- cently graduated. at exercises’ held in {he departmental auditorium. was one of a large ciass seiected for the Course, and approved by ggfectet Jolim Edgar Hoover of the 5..]1‘h0\le.‘}! 6-2.037 Sufioifki vote-r~»: are eligible to cast. ballots in the Spring primary elections next Tues- day, April 6, it is uniikeiy that more than 10 percent of that mums her wi go to the ipoiels, according to the best _c-stimates of seasoned politicians The inducement of1»ive- ly infra-patty contests is lacking, except for one écheduied Demo- cratic county committee tight in a [Southampton Town district. Both Republicans and Democrats will elect delegates and alternates to their respective presidential nominating conventions to be held next summer Congressman W Kingsiand Macy and Jennie A Wanser are the candidates for del- egates to the G. 0. .P. convention, with County Clerk R. Ford Hughes and State Senator S. Wentworth Horton on the ballot as alternates. Marshal! Field and Rene A. Car- reau are the Democratic choices for ‘delegates, and Elections Commis- sioner Robert Hi I-Iairston and James S. Schaeht are standing for aiternates. Salary increases for a number of employees of the Suffolk Ceunty Mosquito Extermination Commis- 51011, County Auditors of and other departments of ghe county government were voted Monday by the Board of Supervisors. Most in- creases\ were e April _1 and went to county workers whd hold exempt positions under civil service and do not receive annual incre- ments. In several instances changes in grade were ordered.. The board again steered clear of a general, overall increase as (1%-r. mended by the Suffolk Chapteref the New York State Civil Service Employees’ Association. Two mp- resentatives of the chapter, William J. Burns of Northport, its first vice. president, and Robert Rubino of Babylon, chapter secretary, met in a closed recess conference with the supervisors, but no move was made tnwarti meeting the organized civil servanfs’ request that their pay schedules be put. on a par with those of state employees. The salaries of .1. Newton Rhqdes and Leslie B. Raymond, prinmpal account clerks in the omce. 01 Conn- iiy Auditor C. W. Pulver, were es- tablished at $3,300 per annum. The former received $2,780. and the lat-A ter, $2,390, according. to the most recently’ pxgblished salary list, that ‘appearing m the Board of Super- visors. Proceedings for 1846. ac Joseph J. Maggi. warden at the -county jail. was advanced to 34,000. Re formerly received $3.500. M1‘!- Ruth S. Hague. con scene» fury to Supervisors’, Clerk Benjarmn Blackman, was given a $300 in- crease, from $2,500 to $2,800. The salary of Mrs, Dorothy Rather. sec‘ :-etary to Gommiuicrner of inter: E. Conway Plummet, was at $1,305.. 1'53 csoufizzme new rates Suffolk dairymen and Eivestock growers registered emphatic oppo- .=i*ion. to plans of the U. S Depart- ment of Agriculture to establish 8 hoof and-mouth disease laboratory at Mrmtauk after hearingone of the ,§ rm :\&:K 3 NW5\ i 3,.“ 'dcparfment’s top-ranking admin!!- \mtors' present ‘the case for the ?s25,ooo,ooo federal 1;-'r'~§ect at 3 ‘meeting in the cntinfy emzrt house, ‘Riven-head‘ fast Fr-iday nigh? ' Dr Bonnet? J Simm<, chief of the ‘USDA Bureau of Animz I_r.dustr'y, 'gavo za thorough.\point—by-fyoint exe- pnsition of the proposed research jprogram that won him the close; {attention of -his audience but failed 'to gain support for the Montauk E location. When Abe Katz‘, president -of the Suffoik Dairyme‘n’s Associa- Him, cauea for a standing vote late {in the evening, the 100 or more spersons gathered in the county ?court ‘room rose as one man to : demonstrate unanimous opposition to the establishment of the big re- lsearch center on Long Island. 3 The position taken by the dairy’ Hand livestock farmers was support- ed by business and civic represen- ; The school was organized in \1935 ,to- train police instructors. and ad- ,n1inistrats)r:'s in, order to raise the ,level at law cniozstement to‘ :1 pro-- ‘tess status. The course at the _' academy incliudedi studies‘ in police organization and administration. ;txa controi, investigative tech—- .nic:;ues‘, Iaboratary studies‘ and gerprinting. _ - Mr. Weeks is quali to in- augurate an adequate training pro- gram for men in his own, or other law enforcement departments. t He» is the seventh o from Suffolk County to complete the course successfully. The others were ‘A. Russell Richards 0! Brightwatexs, Theodore Donnelly, who also was chosen item the District A.tt.cvmey~’s ;staff.; Police Chief Cy Dormelly of ‘Smi Police Chief Francis Leddy 01 East. Hampton, Lt. Ber- nard Gaiser of the 1311;) Town Police, and John Hulsen of Hunt ington, who Lfurmerly was c_l1ief;in. {vesugawr while ma 3. Munder _w3a district attorney. 3 -Senator Brien‘ McMahon 91 Con- necticut. and Representative Karl Stefan oi Nebraska addressed the graduates. A Three cars, two at them garked and unattended, were involved in an accident on ‘Bu‘i.1’s Head Turnpikegaridgehgzmpton road, Sunday at 4:40 p. m., in svhich aneaperson was iajured. A 1933 Chevrolet sedan owned and operated by David Stewart, 28, of North Mam street, Southamprcm, bitmnd south, suyposedly made the turn at Bull's Heat} Tumpike, Bridgehamptan road, near the Mchane residence, at a. high .rate of speed, never straigh out. struck the rear of the parked .1937 DeSot.o sedan owned by Charles L. King, causing it ‘to hit the 1938 Chevrolet sedan owned by ‘Paul Rzzmunno, parked aheaci; then continued. ‘£0 or 513 feet into a Lhe on. the Delmonaco property. Occupants oi. the Stewart car were taken to the Southampton Hos- pital in the Sag Haxbar and Southagmpton ambulances. They were Jessie Alexander, both of whose legs were. fractured; David Stewart, suffering a fractured wrist and disiocated left hip; George Egaml-in, in ctiiical condition with a possible sknli ‘fracture; and James Kgzby, who expired Tuesday afternoon. An auiopsy was performed on Kuby Tuesday. .Both the King and Stewart cars we;-zje. completely wrecke-6. The Bamuxmo ca: had only mine: dan1age.. ;~No’ charges have been agade at this time ‘ Photo by Harbor Studio a Voters of the several Nassau elec- tion districts within. the First Con- gressional District will take part in the election of the convention del- egations. Republican and Democratic‘ state committee members‘ will also be -ghosen. County Clerk‘ Hughes and ennie '1‘. Jones are the ,‘R-,r;u‘bl:ican cagndldates in the First Assembly Dxstnct, and Hollander and Sha13‘<>tte.Lunt seelrlgheé ! posts :or e f nd A. . e Demo- cmtic state committee designees ate Andrew D. Havens‘ and Helyne R. Thomas in the First A. D. and Com- missioner iiairstoa and Earbara M. ‘Fit’?! in the lSecongaA. ha e Ameri bot arty s éeslgnated one candidate for state commitleemem in each assembly diwct, out :( write~in may com-. . A plate the fulf comylement of to for use m-sttimejn several years, la district. Kenneth Tomkirzson is Sggftolk County ending. it_neces«~§ the candidate in me else: A, .1}. and 33:3 to ‘borrow money in ,aatlclpa- 3 William 1-’. Rage} the .59;-Qua mt: of tazffxmectg wnenula. 13.. ,4 > . . »e2;penmsl.. .' Jrt~'t' . ‘ ? mowing: Cozr lcomiaiittee mamhers ‘co Of $393,996 was autheéémed serve to: the next two and one-half by the Boitil .13! Supervisors on 1:he:§ years‘ are to be elected by the recommendation 0!‘ its Democrats. The only scheduledsi. man. Supervisor Philipp A. .Ba1-‘mules: is in the em Election ms;-2:’ tamer of ’ itrict of Southampton Town. In this‘ The resolution authorizes CountyQuos?ue-East Quogue area. Helynel Treasurer Milton L.i.Bu:'ns to ‘issue ; 5'» T503135 and E-1iZab*3?-lh Reeves. lax anticipation notes up -to that;incurnben.ts. are opposed by David- amount on and after April 1, The gsiezrsinski and Jenneth Lamas. It notes_are to Inaiure not more than; is ungiexstood, however, that a num- six’ months. from the date’ of issue 1 her of write-.ins are planned in sev- and will bear intcrest :1 rate not ' 9131 Other di5Wi¢‘t5- exceeding 3 per cent per annumj The Republicans have an enroll- They may be sold at private sale in : ment of 50,828, with 23,173 m the? one installment or in several in- ‘First A- 33- and 27.555 in the 560-, stallments from time to time_ as ' and A. D. The Democratic enroll-‘ the treasurer may determine. {guest is u.ops._or which 6.172% is1 According to the resolution‘ 3 E m the first dnstnct and 4,833 In the V‘ ‘minimum of $2,000,009 is due theésecongl. There are 118 enrolled‘: ‘county in taxes under the 1947 A13‘-Amergcan Labor Party voters and: ‘warrants signed last December. The the L’bera.1 Party has 8.6‘ , gcounty is the last to get its share: P01.“ 31\“ be 099“ m .S“ ! 5 ‘of the tax pie____the requirements of 196_d1st-r1_cts from noon until 9 p. m. ‘A the town and school and other dis- v°tm3 Wm bgf by paper banot’ TI? tn-icts must be satis in full before ban“. ‘5 cherry; Dem9°rah°’ :3 gown tax receiver. may make a gz_'een,Amer1can Labor, granite, and ‘payment to the G0ll{1t}’_. Wlzile the!L‘be’31~ Sky m‘.‘e‘ . h amount collected so far this year .The State L'q“°r A“th°my .35 tis substantially‘ larger than the ‘iiwected that‘ an places Yendmg 4 ammmts received in the Same pe_ lnquor _re-mam closed durmg the riods in former years, the levy is “‘°“\’ F59 99115 3}\? °F\’“~ considerably greater and the per- P°13m‘.g ,9ia°‘?5‘ m Sag H.arb°r £93‘ lcentage of the levy collected is the Smmg 9\ma’y' Apr‘! 6' Wm actually several points behind re— be at the are ,h.°.use' Church and‘ hen: past years. lsvfge streets, anal tile house on ‘ The board voted to accept the am street\ oflfer of the Reeordak Corporation ‘to furnish a micro- machine 10;- the use of the. County Clerlrfs o at a. cost of: $1,800, £0.13. New York. The same company will provide a reader to cost $800; copy board, $50; accessory extension shelf, $15; 33 mm at $5.55 per 100-foot roll, and 35 mm receiving spools at 30 cents each. The equipment will be used to record old records -and papers in the clerk's-o and tree valuable space for mote recent ' tatives and county and local o in the audience, and also by\ letters or resofutions of protest sem: in by various organizations. 'Fbr:_ Long Iszand Duck Growers’ Association, the Long Island Association. and the village boards of East ‘Hampton Dr. Frank KoImberx,..£2h.ieI '01 Police; Ed Wagner and Omcex rinzton or this \village. and Trooper Laxgbrecht and Sat. Reddinzton oi the State Police were at the scene «.1: the nccidcnt. ' and Horthport were among ‘the -groupsforwarding. protests. Dr. Earl» ‘J. Moore. assistant state commisd 4 5 st Ct was so; narhoi is and April 6; ll Anal From Italy, Board Of Slpmisors Auihatizo Shot!-lam A Bémwiiug of mom sionerof agiticulture. and Alired ‘me Aomcers comprising the 37th scssian of the Academy came from 30 states, Puerto Rico, Canada and Egypt. The graduate from Em: was Lieut. C03. Ahmec! Ahmed Kamel, Police of H. M. King ‘Famuk :11 Egypt. Canada was replztmented by Sergeant. of Detec ‘Geog-ge S. 33:91» oi the Winnigeg €323 ‘?a1ice ! Maniteba. j Tucker, state superizztendent of rine Fisheries. -also indicated by the tenor of their remarks a total lack of sympathy for the federal pro- Despite the discouraging recep- itien his proposition received, Dr. jsiznms ‘ a reporter as he left the ‘meeting’ that Long‘ Island ‘is not ineC£;§s;.ari1,‘;' ruled oubof the cj.epaz“b=:_ (mem's p1ag;\s.\~ He express ‘hope -jthat «e;n meetingggzuld be ‘an- irasxged and that Long Islanders ybe won over to the support’ ~01. as 'propesi'tion which vitgl 1:6 the igf“1sno*;ioz1, and in his opinion, would «nf.economic bene to the com- gnunity‘ in -which it is located. I by Public Weliare Commissioner Richard T. Gilmartin, Moniiauk resident and secretary of ‘the c'~lairymen's asociation, who ear- lier in the day had a'c‘coempanie5' him on a tour of Eastern Long_Is- land, Dr. Simms spoke first of the serious nature of the foot-and-mouth disease. He said it is highly in- _ '1.'he cries eta hungry came no interpreter msjr duel‘! wixr which will be givensnot in were: ‘but in 1:156:31 \a3.:*3‘£’.€$arx£1r.yee=eminh‘:g ‘April :1! 7:39: when \tziends of ~CARE——Sag Harbor-awn! em:-ct, Qthe Municipal Bu amt! a name iwill be drawn to which the first CARE parcel from this viilage will the sent. At this time there.wiii.a1so be a report on the sale— of tickets, and all money received to date dur- ing the March collection win ‘he handed over to Mr. Sigmund. Anyone, regar of contribu. tion, may send in the name. at a person. or child in need of food, and all who care to be present at the Municipal Building that night are cordially invited to attend. ‘That such need does exist, and {mat the cry, “Pm hungry,\ is being uttered in almost every ‘Euxopean language is a fact becoming £ncreas~ ingly clear to ‘us all whether or not we have relatives upon that un~ happy continent ‘where the dread horseman, Famine, new rides. The radio, the press and even our own private mail bring £0,115 each day those words which need no trans~ lation into English. the one lan- guage which up to date has not had to voice them. ‘ 7. - °~\5.:.. ~';7,“‘ : of pay for inostmlto extemkxstim. ~ workcors as; 325* —t;.§.% commission Extei-minafoizs (labor: ers) virili now receive 95 cents an hour and equipment operators $110 per hour The hourlypayfof the agency’s janitor was at $1.. The position of stock gkeeper was advanced from Grade -6 to Grade 7 and that of marine captain from 7 to 8. The salary of. the director's secretary was fixed at $2,100,. the rnaximum for the gmde. On the recommenaation of Sher- iff William C’. Mccollom, who met in closed conference. with the board, the per diem pay of the cleaners in the county buildings was advanced from $6 to $7. ' IA change from Grade 7 to Grade ‘ 3' means pay increases for Howard D. Hunter. John M. Kerbs and Wal- ter Willis Jr., deputy county inspec- tors of weights and measures. The salary range for Grade 7 is $2,100 to $2,700; for the next higher grade, it is $2,400 to $3,000. Kerbs and ‘Willis will now receive $2,400, and Hunter $2,520, according to the resolution. On the 1946 salary list, Hunter is down for $2,220 and Kerbs for $2,100. Willis was not in the department at that time.‘ Raymond E. D/IacLean,. who oc~ cupies a dual county-state post in the n of County Clerk R. Ford Hughes, has been receiving a coun- ty salary of $2,520 as principal ac» count clerk and $500 as mortgage tax clerk, a state. post. He will now state, making his total salary $3.520 receive $500 additional from the per annum. The board also adopted a resolu- cnnr scuff‘? xmrim scams Trustworthy, .!ova1,.£riendiy, hem» ful, courteous, kind, obedient, cheer» fui, brave, clean and rev- erent are the twelve {am at a Boy Scout. Q set of principles couIdn’t have been written for the youth at‘ the world. At the present time. the Suffelk County Council of the Boy seems at America is con- ducting its annual drive for funds. A11 donations remain, in Su County and are used to further the principles eif Scouting throughout the -county; During the past week Richard Mccarron has generously volunteered’ his services to solicit funds. You may also send your do- nation or ‘bring ii in person to C. Axrtimr Baumann or Charles C. Saunders. who have been designat- ed by the Scout Commissioner of Suffolk County to receive such do- nations. No gift is too small. The youth of America needs Scouting more than ever. Will you help? fectious, is easily. transmitted and attacks cattle, hogs, sheep, goats and other domestic animals as well as wild game animals. A high per- centage of infected animals recover -—-mortality losses may run as low as one to two per cent-——but the economic loss is high because it leaves its victims living skeletons, and in some cases, crippled. , Today, it is found on every continent except Australia, North America had been free of the dis- ease for some years until late in 1946, when it appeared in Mexico. There have been. however. several outbreaks in the United States, notably in 1914, again in 1924-1926\ and in 1929. ‘These were JANICE McMAIl0hi IS FOUR g Mrs. John. McMahon Jr. ,enter- tained on March 23 for her daugh- fter Janice, on \her faurth birthday. ‘Janice’; iiitle guests besides her sis- ter Carol and brother Terry, were: [Eileen Archibald, Bobby Jacobs, Carol Jacobs, Marilyn Beaver, Mary Lou Mcmahcm, Mary Ursula Wood, Theedera and Dorothy Worth, Patsy Lagasse and Bobbie Harrington. J‘anice’s grandmother, Mrs. John McMahon. Sn, Mrs. Melvin Wood, Mrs. Ellwood 3:.-aver and Mrs. Ed- ward Archibald were also present. Games weze followed. by ice cream and cake. . v 232?; Last” week. the Express published a letter received by the Rev. Donald Crawford from Mr. and Mrs. Karl Bade of Hanover. Germany. In this letter the urgent and bitter need tor help was expresseci and could not tail to move anyone who read this appeal. « V —, Tuesday. the New York Times carried the story of a scrap of paper received by of of the United Nations Appeal for Children. A single scrap of. paper with a single sentence scrawled upon it in French. “Please God. please God, don't let others ever be as \hungry as I was.” And’ now, Romeo E. Guaraldiy oi this village receives the following‘ messages trom various relatives in Italy: ‘- successfully stamped out, but not without great loss, T The Mexican border has been closed. to cattle shippers since the vdiscfovery of the disease in Vera SAG HARBOR GUILD GEANGES NAMEa Cruz, Mexico, in November of 1946, although ethe present quarantine line is still some 300 miles south of the Rio Grande. The USDA co—- operated with Mexican authorities in an eradication program, but after‘ thousands of infected cattle had been slaughtered, the Mexican‘~gov- The to}.-lowing announcement was made today by Emil E. F;-‘achon, president of Sag Harbor Guild, Inc., and vice president of the Bulova Watch ‘Company, Inc; .. “The Sag Harbor Guild, Inc. is being absorbed by its parent com» pany, the jBu1ova Watch Company, Inc., as at April 1, 1948. This is. purely‘ a matter of internal organ. ization. and involves no change in actual ownership, policy, manage- ment, personnel, employees, or manufacturing operations.” tion providing for the payment of ’$30 monthly to deputy sherjffs in lieu of expenses while on duty in the county. _E:-rpress Classi Ads are read and get results. This is the second batch of pay increases granted by the board this year; at a special meeting on March 8, raises yvere granted six employ- ees of the Qu Board. of Elec- tions and as many members of County Clerk Hughes’ staff. ernment brought the program to an end because of the opposition of the cattle growers and the heavy The tollowing paragraphs were translated from passages in letters written $0 me by close relatives in Italy. “There may be a future but to us here in Italy the future is black and permeated with nothing but despair.” .T“It- took the‘ earnings of five hours of. hard work to pay for the pustage of this letter.” “There. is so much to be done and so little to do it with.” . drain on the nation's livestock. In Dr. Simms’ opinion, the danger of the disease being introquced into this country from Mexlco is not YOUR HOSFITAB The contracts and supplies com- mittee was authorized to rent an additional room in the Mills build- ing at Patchogue, on a month to month basis, for the use ‘of the Department of Probation whxch now has quarters there. The monthly rental is not to excee $50. The committee was also authorized to advertise for bids for coal to be delivered to the county buildings at Riverhead, for use next winter. great, since the quarantine is rigid- ly enforced. OPPORTUNITY FOR A NURSIHG CAREER BUTTS, BURNS AND BABCOCK IN THE RACE FOR CHIEFS Through its School of Nursing --the only one in Suffolk County - your Hospitaloffers young women an opporhmity to ‘become registered nurses amidst pleasant surroundings and'1inder favorable conditions‘. Tuition is free«—- uniforms are supplied and a monthfs vacation is granted each year. ‘ » Nevertheless, its presence south of the Rio Grande is an ever-present menace, and will probably continue to be so for some years to come. All ! are ‘reminded that next Thursday night, April 8, is election night. Fred Butts is run- ning for chief. He has 20 years of faithful and loyal service in the department. He has been captain and Warden of Montauk Hose Co. and has been elected and served one term as second assistant chief -and two terms as assistant chief. There is also the possibility that the virus will enter in some of the many thousands of packages of food of animal origin that come to this country from abroad, or it: might even be introduced, unwittingly or otherwise, by some trans-oceanic airline passenger. . In this respect, Dr. Simms said the hoof-and-mouth disease will probably play its part in the bac- teriological warfare of the future; that outbreaks could be arranged’ for, presumably by», under-cover agents, “in 20 to 50 places simul- taneously in each state.” If such an attack on one of the na’c'io_n’s_ prin- cipal sources of supply should I 'r 3- , rig‘ A 9 xi?” A12’ at the instruction does not take place in Southampton. During the three year course, student nuxsesspend a total of. eight months in three New York Hospitals-— 1.2 weeks of iiistruction in Pediatrics at the'Babies’ Hospital of the Presbyterian Medical. Centre -—- 12 weeks of Psychiatry at the Brooklyn Qtate Hospital and 8 weeks instruction in Communicable Diseases at Willard Parker Hospital. “How can we do anything with pains of hunger in our stomachs. Weak bodies and nothing but des- pair in our minds?” “I earned last week 2,000 lites out of 49 hours of work only to that during the same week the price at bread «jumped so high that my- .2,000 lires could only buy about 10 loaves of bread.” “ . . . What we neeti is food and more food to give strength to our bodies so that we can work and live in the hope that a brighter tomorrow will come without the blackness, the uncertainties and the tortures of today. . . . ” Joseph Burns is running for first assistant chief. He has served 12 years with Murray Hill Hose Co., and rose to the rank of captain and warden. He was elected second as- sistant chief for the past two terms. Paul. Babcock is running for sec- ond assistant chief. He has 11 years ‘service with the Otter Hose Co. He was captain, and is now serving his‘ term as warden. Applicatibns are ROW‘ being received for the Fall term which com- mences on September 1st. _ » ?“~ 7 5 a ‘,*\s4>*‘-é~«\‘* » Girls. who are graduating from high schools in Suffolk County this June would do well. to consider the many advantages of a nursing career. For furtherv-information write '50 L Romeo E. Guaraldi Sag Harbor, N. Y. “We ‘often think that if the rest of our lives was to be spent in such conditions as these, death would be wc ! as a real. blessing.” Friends of CARE -'-Sag Harbor; can not let such appeals go un-. answered, and the sending of its parcel is symbolic of the good will of our village. - _ rem, SOUTIIAMPTON HOSPITAL 265 HERRICK ROAD SO N, N. T. . What good is money it it cannot buy what you need with it?\ (Continued on page four) ‘ Téitx